Crunch numbers and bones in the bizarre debut from Squanchtendo

We talked to the dream team of Rick & Morty, The Stanley Parable, and former Epic Games talent about Accounting.

During PAX West I had a chance to meet up with the founders of Squanchtendo, a new game studio from Justin Roiland (Rick & Morty) and Tonya Watson (formerly Epic Games). They let me try out their first game, Accounting, which is best described as an absurd, uncut interdimensional Rick & Morty episode about crunching numbers, sort of. You'll need an HTC Vive to play Accounting, but if you have one, it's free and coming later this month.

If you're curious and don't mind some vague spoilers, check out the trailer up top or our interview below.

I hesitate to say too much about Accounting since it's most potent when it surprises, but the basic framework is this: You start in an accounting office with mouse cursors for hands. You can walk around the scene and interact with objects naturally, opening drawers, tossing binders, and the like. All the while, characters voiced by Roiland and Pugh react to your actions and scream at you over an intercom. After finding one object in particular, things get metaphysical (as if accounting wasn't philosophic enough) and the experience goes off the rails—in a good way. Accounting proceeds to get so strange and outright twisted that one moment in particular made me laugh and recoil in horror at once.

For more on Accounting, check out the website and subscribe to the mailing list if you want the immediate word when it releases.

At only 11 years old, James took apart his parents’ computer and couldn’t figure out how to put it back together again. As an Associate Editor, he’s embarked on a dangerous quest to solve Video Games. Wish him luck.